If this is what you're looking for, and not the EXACT font you asked, then my recommendation is Carbon, hands down. In my opinion, the signature event that separated the emergence of palaeohumans from their anthropoid progenitors was not tool-making but a rudimentary oral communication that replaced the hoots and gestures still used by lower primates. By flexibility, I mean non-pixel font (thus not requiring specific font sizes in order not to break up), not blocked (in larger sizes the spaces between blocks will be too evident), with multiple weights, and support for a wide array of non english characters. Language existed long before writing, emerging probably simultaneously with sapience, abstract thought and the Genus Homo. If I were you, however, I'd be searching for a font with the most similar qualities possible, but with the flexibility of a regular font. These fonts appear better matches in relation to the letter design, if you get down to the conceptual detail (i.e.: lowercase "y" baseline above the regular x baseline, asterisk '*' has a horizontal and no vertical stroke, number '3' is not rounded on top half, etc). We’ll try to automatically separate the letters. See here some examples of what a ‘good’ image looks like. The rest of 10 ‘misses’ are usually caused by low quality images (low resolution, text distorted, etc). Keep in mind that these fonts, while pixelated and blocked on the screen, might yield solid results depending on size, resolution and quality of printer. The system uses advanced AI to find the font in 90 of the cases. In my opinion, closest matches if you're willing to settle for a pixel font that has similar appearance on similar font sizes are: Telindon Heavy at 20px and DPI-Bold at 16-20px. Agreed that finding an exact font might be impossible.